The first of a series of articles about RealQM has been submitted to Foundations of Chemistry with here and updated version:
This article presents an ambitious and provocative proposal—RealQM—as an alternative computational and conceptual foundation for quantum chemistry. Its central idea, modeling electrons as non-overlapping charge densities in real three-dimensional space with a free-boundary formulation, is original and intellectually stimulating. The work stands out for its explicit dissatisfaction with the interpretational and computational burdens of Standard Quantum Mechanics (StdQM) and for attempting to restore locality, physical intuition, and linear computational scaling.
Strengths and contributions
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Clear ontological stance
The paper adopts a consistently realist ontology, treating electron densities as physical objects rather than probabilistic constructs. This addresses a long-standing discomfort many chemists and physicists have with the configuration-space formalism of StdQM and aligns with Schrödinger’s original intuitions. -
Computational motivation
The emphasis on linear scaling with the number of electrons and the reduction to a “three-line code” is compelling. If robust, this would represent a genuine breakthrough for ab initio simulations, particularly for large systems where StdQM-based methods require severe approximations. -
Unified continuum framework
Casting atomic and molecular structure as a multi-phase continuum mechanics problem with free boundaries is mathematically elegant and conceptually coherent. The analogy with classical variational principles and gradient flows is one of the paper’s strongest aspects. -
Concrete demonstrations
The article goes beyond philosophical critique by presenting numerical results for atoms, molecules, shell structure, bonding, and even speculative nuclear models. This breadth is unusual and commendable.
Points requiring clarification or strengthening
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Status of non-overlap and exclusion
The assumption of non-overlapping electron densities replaces Pauli exclusion, antisymmetry, and spin with geometric separation. While this is internally consistent, the paper would benefit from a clearer argument explaining why non-overlap is physically justified rather than merely effective. At present, it risks being perceived as a built-in constraint that substitutes, rather than explains, fermionic behavior. -
Empirical scope and validation
Agreement with selected ground-state energies is encouraging, but chemistry is ultimately judged by predictive power across a wide range of observables: excitation spectra, reaction barriers, response properties, magnetic effects, and spin-dependent phenomena. The absence of spin, exchange, and correlation needs to be addressed not only philosophically but also empirically. -
Excited states and spectroscopy
The discussion of excited states and radiation via beat frequencies is intriguing, but it remains qualitative. It is unclear whether RealQM can systematically reproduce selection rules, fine structure, or multiplet splittings that are central to atomic and molecular spectroscopy. -
Free-boundary dynamics and uniqueness
The Bernoulli free-boundary formulation is central to the theory, yet questions of uniqueness, stability, and convergence of the boundary evolution are largely unaddressed. These issues are critical if RealQM is to be regarded as a well-posed physical theory rather than a numerical construction. -
Polemic tone
While the historical critique of StdQM is understandable, the repeated framing in terms of “brainwashing” and “non-physics” may alienate readers who would otherwise engage seriously with the model. A more neutral tone would strengthen the paper’s reception in the broader community.
Overall assessment
The article is bold, unconventional, and intellectually rich. It challenges deeply entrenched assumptions in quantum chemistry and offers a coherent alternative grounded in real-space physics and computability. Whether RealQM can ultimately replace or complement StdQM remains an open question, but the work deserves careful scrutiny rather than dismissal. At minimum, it functions as a valuable thought experiment that forces reconsideration of what is essential—and what may be contingent—in the quantum-mechanical description of chemistry.
If developed further with clearer empirical benchmarks, mathematical analysis of the free-boundary problem, and a more systematic treatment of excited-state phenomena, RealQM could stimulate productive debate well beyond its immediate claims.
